A blog about everything Boston Red Sox. We are the voice of Red Sox fans, covering everything Red Sox... and maybe a little more.

Manny Ramirez

01/12/2012

Manny Ramirez is serious about returning to baseball. While we can speculate about his true motives, one thing is clear: Manny doesn't want to be remembered as the once-great slugger who hit .059 in his final year before abruptly retiring due to another PED scandal.

"I want to show people that Manny can change, that he can do the right thing... And to show people that I still can play. I don't want to leave the game like I did. I also want to show my kids that if you make a mistake, don't quit. Just go back and fix it. And if you're going to leave, leave the right way."

Ramirez, who's currently working out in Florida, taking swings in a batting cage and getting in shape by working out in a pool, believes he can be a role model if a team gives him a chance.

"A bunch of guys are going to look at me and say hey, this guy made a mistake but he didn't quit. Look how he finished. He did the right thing and came back," Ramirez told Gomez.

I'm not 100% positive that Manny coming back is the "right thing". He's more than worn out his welcome in the majors. It's as simple as that. Manny's never come across a bridge he couldn't burn. While his bat has always forced us to ignore his transgressions, if he proved anything in Tampa it's that he flat out can't hit anymore. He looked slow and lost at the plate.

When he retired, we justifiably worried about Manny's life without baseball. Coming back is probably the best thing for him and his family. But I just can't see any team serious about bringing Manny aboard. He'll be lucky to get one minor league invite to prove that he still has some juice in his bat.

If Barry Bonds taught us anything, teams are willing to ignore talent to avoid black clouds and side shows; which Manny certainly is at this point.

12/30/2011

Every morning we compile the links of the day and dump them here... highlighting the big storyline. Because there's nothing quite as satisfying as a good morning dump.

Andrew Bailey’s arrival has started a positive domino effect on the rest of the pitching staff.

Newly acquired reliever Mark Melancon doesn’t have to deal with the pressure of closing in Boston and instead can become an eighth-inning arm.

In turn, Daniel Bard can more easily shift into the rotation rather than be held in reserve as a possible closer. And Alfredo Aceves can remain a swing man, slip into the rotation or maybe even assume a late-innings relief role.

Bailey makes those options much more palatable. But even with the back of the bullpen and the top of the rotation more clearly defined, the Red Sox still will be in the market for another starter this winter, particularly if they want to keep Aceves in the bullpen, where he was so valuable last season.

Let's get that out of the way now and temper our expectations. Bailey is a good, young closer, but he's not elite. He went from being dominant in 2009 and 2010 to being just plain good in 2011. In fact, he gave up 34 hits in 41 innings last year (34 in 49 the year prior, and 49 in 83 in '09), compared to 50 surrendered by Papelbon through 64 innings. Taking it a step further, Bailey's WHIP last season was 1.10 and Papelbon's was 0.93. So if you were one of those people that were ripping their hair out because Papelbon always seemed to have a runner or two on base, well, you may want to prepare yourself for more of the same.

But bringing in Bailey for what seems like a pretty low price is a monumental stepping stone for the pitching staff as a whole. Bard can now move to the rotation without having to worry about being plugged into the closer role. Melancon's role is now clearly defined. The last pieces are Aceves and the 5th spot in the rotation.

Aceves can prepare to start and Cherington can look for another starter or two. You know, that whole depth thing we keep hearing about. And if they do bring in another starter (or two), Aceves is going to be the long man in the bullpen anyway, so getting his arm strength up and preparing to go 5-6-7 innings is in everybody's best interest.

Roy Oswalt makes too much sense not to bring aboard. He's the Sox dream free agent: veteran with somethign to prove, willing to sign a one-year deal to prove it. I could be very happy with a rotation of Beckett, Lester, Buchholz, Oswalt and Bard.

12/04/2011

Ramirez has hired Barry Praver and Scott Shapiro as his agents and has applied for reinstatement from MLB’s voluntary retired list, the source said.

Ramirez, 39, will be eligible to play again after serving a suspension under baseball's drug testing program. He appeared in five games with the Tampa Bay Rays this year, going 1 for 17 with zero extra-base hits.

Manny has been exposed as a repeat performance enhancing drug offender, and was also recently arrested for domestic battery. Furthermore, he just can't hit anymore. He's almost 40, he's a diva, he's a user, and now he wants to try to hook on with someone?

Sorry, Manny. You could have just tried to fade into the sunset and let time heal the wounds. Instead, you're still trying to hang around.

Hate to say it, but I've seen this before. Guys like him who try to hang around this long do it for one reason: money. I'm getting the feeling Manny has blown the ridiculous amount money he's made and he's desperate for more.

I've got no hard evidence of that other than other similar stories. I'm waiting for the "Manny is broke" story to be written in the not-too-distant future.

10/12/2011

This morning, the Boston Globe’s Bob Hohler put out all the dirty laundry on the Red Sox and what might’ve caused the September collapse. The accusations in the article are flat out disturbing. Players tanking because they weren’t too fond of management rescheduling games due to Hurricane Irene? Pitchers drinking beer, eating fried chicken (probably Popeye’s since it’s down the street), and playing video games? Ortiz openly suggesting using Alfredo Aceves as a starter is a disrespectful act? All covered in this article.

But probably the most disturbing of them all, as Chuck mentioned earlier, is what they had to say about Terry Francona. It pretty much suggests that Francona was addicted to pills, albeit in a roundabout way. A flat out ridiculous claim in itself. But then this article puts together a three punch combination in order to knock out Francona’s credibility as a manager:

Here’s the straight right:

Francona spent the season living in a hotel after he moved out of the Brookline home he shared with Jacque, his wife of nearly 30 years. But he adamantly denied his marital problems affected his job performance.

Really? Is this another necessary topic that we as fans need to know? How come this wasn’t mentioned at ALL throughout the whole season? But of course this CLEARLY affected Francona, just like it affected Lackey on the mound when his wife was going through chemo earlier this year. And how it affected him again in the summer when he decided to file for divorce, but that’s neither here or there.

Before I can say anymore, the left hook is coming this way!

In the face of his team’s corroded spirit, Francona became increasingly ineffectual, according to team sources. Francona was burdened not only by the frustration of coping with the least dedicated group of players of his Boston tenure, but by the likelihood that Sox owners would not exercise his contractual option for 2012.

Yes, I’m sure that Francona was totally thinking me first in this situation. Like when he tried to rally the troops in a players only meeting after laying a 14-0 beatdown on the Blue Jays. He was trying to save his ass! Had nothing to do with the fact that he didn’t like the pitchers drinking beer and playing video games on game days when they weren’t throwing! TITO ONLY CARES ABOUT TITO!

But wait for it… wait for it….

Here comes the uppercut:

While Francona coped with his marital and health issues, he also worried privately about the safety of his son, Nick, and son-in-law, Michael Rice, both of whom are Marine officers serving in Afghanistan.

So not only was he popping pills and trying to save his marriage and job, but he was also worried about his son and son-in-law because they were deployed. That explains why Crawford couldn’t catch that ball in left field that tied the final game of the season. Or how Robert Andino made everyone in the Sox bullpen his bitches. Or the fact that these group of guys who are paid a good chunk of change couldn’t act like professionals and take their job seriously. Nope it was all Tito’s fault.

Now it’s bad enough that Francona is no longer the manager of the Sox, but what has he done that merits these disgusting accusations? Why stab him in the back like this?

WEEI’s Mut and Merloni tackle the subject head on and they’re right: no one gets away scot free.

The Sox front office and PR staff have become credibility serial killers. If they have someone on payroll that isn’t happy and following their way, they will do whatever it takes to make that person look like they’re the scum of the Earth. They did it to Nomar after they flirted with A-Rod in the offseason and after the Sox won their first title, nobody seemed to care. Then they did it to Manny, because they didn’t want to deal with his attitude so after a second title and a statistical slip on his part, they somehow got fans to accept the notion that trading the greatest hitter that my generation will ever see was not only necessary, but the right thing to do.

Now they’re trying to do the same to Tito and they went in for the kill. They left no stone unturned. They dug out every last skeleton that was in his closet for the fans to see and so they can shout from the top of 4 Yawkey Way that they have started to right the ship. That this organization will be back on top again.

This time the ownership isn’t getting away scot free. You don’t attack the most successful manager in this franchise’s history and get away with it. Very few are sipping the Kool-Aid anymore and now the only way for people to believe in this team again is when the ownership takes that knife out of Francona’s back and puts it into their dark heart.

10/06/2011

Every morning, we compile the links of the day and dump them here... highlighting the big storyline. Because there's nothing quite as satisfying as a good morning dump.

Terry Francona maintains that his departure from the Red Sox was a mutual decision. But he did acknowledge during a radio appearance yesterday that he was never asked to stay on as manager during his meeting with Sox owner John Henry last Friday.

“That didn’t happen,’’ he told WEEI. “Again, there was a reason [for] sitting up in that office having some meetings. I have to own a lot of responsibility for what happened because it was my responsibility to not let happen what happened.’’

Francona said last week that he perceived a lack of support from Henry, chairman Tom Werner, and president Larry Lucchino. He initially backed off that statement yesterday, saying the owners were “second to none’’ in baseball.

But later in the interview, he addressed the issue again.

“Eight years together is a lot, and I have a lot of respect for them and what they do,’’ he said. “There were some things that were voiced in meetings I viewed maybe as not being supportive. Maybe they didn’t. Everybody has their own opinion.

“They gave me an opportunity and I ended up being here for eight years. For that, I’ll always be grateful. Again, maybe it was time to move on.’’

For those that didn't catch the interview on WEEI, here you go. Glenn Ordway went out of his way to ask all sorts of questions that Tito weren't going to ask, particularly about the clubhouse issues. Francona also tried to squash the issue about the beer drinking in the clubhouse that has been driven to the ground by the media. He simply stated that he treated the players like men, which is nothing wrong with that.

The other topics discussed in the interview were his upcoming debut as a color commentator, if he'd work with Theo Epstein again in the future, and if he'd come back if they picked up his option. It's good to hear from Francona but Ordway was awful with the questions and reminded me he embodies everything I hate about Boston sports media. The highlight of the interview was when Tito mentioned he recieved a call from Manny Ramirez and that he appreciated the call. I would love to know what was said on that call but I bet Manny definitely said somewhere "I told you that Youkilis was a puta! You should've let me kick his ass!"

This is my fourth attempt at writing this morning's dump. The previous three were an odd mixture of vulgarities and incoherent swipes at the keyboard in between violent, heaving sobs. Did you know it's possible to cry so much that you short out your keyboard?

The Red Sox lost a game where the Orioles threw Rick VandenHurk on the mound to start. Not even Rick VandenHurk's mother thought Baltimore stood a chance last night. And while Rick VandenHurk didn't pitch so well (yes, I really really enjoy the name Rick VandenHurk), the Red Sox pitching was just that much worse.

Tell me if this sounds familiar: Red Sox starter struggles early, is out of the game by the third inning. Sox batters battle back, giving the Sox the lead heading into the 8th. Tito turns the game over to his oh so amazing bullpen, who immediately vomit all over your hopes and dreams.

With the Yankees taking down the Rays last night, we didn't lose any ground in the Wild Card. But if this is the type of effort we take to the field against an Orioles squad lead by Rick VandenHurk, I don't know that I want to deal with the anger and frustration of getting blown out in October.

And in related news, I'm pretty sure I've lost the ability to pretend to be optimistic about this season.

Also, be sure to check out the 'Yankee fan' link from CSNNE below. What a dick.

On Page 2, Manny is picking up a bat again (to play baseball this time).

09/13/2011

Every morning, we compile the links of the day and dump them here... highlighting the big storyline. Because there's nothing quite as satisfying as a good morning dump.

...“We have an opportunity ahead of us to play good baseball for two and a half weeks and ride that momentum to the postseason,” Epstein said. “If we don’t do it, we don’t deserve to be there. We have to prove that we are the team that had the best record in baseball for 4-plus months, not the team that started 2-10 or has played 3-10 most recently. That’s on us. We have to go out and do it.”

[...]

“We’re not getting very good starting pitching right now,” Epstein said. “Our bullpen is a downturn. We have some guys who are not having the kind of at bats they’ve had over the course of the season. We’re not playing great defense. We’re making some mistakes once the ball is in play. A little bit of everything has contributed to it.

[...]

“I’m glad we play the Rays 4 times coming up (Sept. 15-18 at Fenway),” Epstein said. “If we can’t right ship against these guys, if we can’t do what we need to do, we probably don’t deserve to get into the postseason.”...

Everyone is down on this team and with good reason. It doesn't help that we just watched Tom Brady and the Pats beat up on the Dolphins and we transition to a team on a 5-game skid. The Sox are 2-8 in their last 10 and pitching is horrible. Theo also noted that the bad pitching has a direct effect on the offense. When the offense has to play a game of comeback in the early innings, their mentality has changed. We see cases of over-swinging, swinging at bad pitches, and sometimes, bad base-running.

Theo is also right about playing 4 against the Rays this week. If the Sox can't hack it against the Rays, then they are not deserving of a playoff berth. The Sox have a great opportunity here to gain some ground. They can bury the Rays in the wild card race, and take advantage of the 6 games against Baltimore. Their test begins today, with a chance for redemption against Toronto in a quick 2-game set.

05/13/2011

If you hadn't picked up on it yet, I've got a bit of a writer-crush on SI.com's Joe Posnanski. He's everything I aspire to be. In fact, if he wasn't so hideous-looking (no offense, Joe) I'd probably hang posters of him above my bed.

No, there’s something more here: Massive, massive public pressure. If a player is caught taking steroids in baseball, he’s disgraced. If he’s a great player, he will be humiliated in the Hall of Fame balloting. If he’s a good player, he will get savaged in the media and by fans. If he’s a mediocre player, he will find it hard to get work — teams don’t need that sort of publicity anymore. We’ve seen this happen. We know it’s real. And this sort of public pressure is not there in football, for many logical and illogical reasons.

In baseball, the public pressure is so intense that, I think, it has transcended reason and fairness and perspective. Now, if a player has a hot month-long stretch, the whispers begin. If a player hits more home runs than his history suggests, the whispers turn to murmurs. With this sort of heat surrounding the game, it seems to me that to take the chance of getting caught using steroids in baseball these days you’d have to be: (1) desperate; (2) arrogant beyond reason; (3) detached from reality.*

*MannyBManny, from what I can gather, was all three.

Joe also takes a look at some of the batting statistics of this young season, which are shockingly similar to the average between 1981-1993. Hard to ignore.

It makes complete sense. There is an awful stigma attached to confirmed or accused steroid users that wasn't in place just a few seasons ago. I think it's a bit silly and even hypocritical, but it's very real. Someone gets accused of it today, and they're the lead story on SportsCenter for 3 straight days. The topic of every sports-themed talk show for a week. It's not something that gets swept under the rug. Ever.

And the only way to completely avoid it is to not take the roids. That's a lesson that's finally sunk in.

04/09/2011

"I'm at ease," Ramirez told ESPNdeportes.com via phone from his home in Miami. "God knows what's best [for me]. I'm now an officially retired baseball player. I'll be going away on a trip to Spain with my old man."

Really, Manny? If you really thought God knew what was best for you, you'd have retired years ago when your skills declined to a point where you were no longer a viable major league hitter. If you really thought God knew what was best for you, you wouldn't have done all that juice for however long you were doing it.

I'm not here to get into a steroids debate... but I'm f'ing sick of these athletes invoking God like they're all pious. Getting busted wasn't God's message to get out of baseball, Manny. Regularly swinging through fastballs was God's message to get out of baseball. I wish you would have listened to him back then.

04/08/2011

Over the past few weeks I've cracked a few jokes about how I can't see the Manny-Rays marriage lasting or ending on good terms. I was partially right. The marriage is over on April 8th, shortly after it began. But for none of the reasons I would have expected.

Manny Ramirez retired from baseball Friday instead of facing a 100-game suspension for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug, according to two people briefed on the matter.

Ramirez tested positive for the performance-enhancing drug during spring training and was recently informed of the positive result, according to the people.

In a news release, the commissioner’s office said it had recently notified Ramirez “of an issue under Major League Baseball’s Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.”

The statement added, “Rather than continue with the process under the Program, Ramirez has informed M.L.B. that he is retiring as an active player.”

The commissioner’s office said that if Ramirez wanted to return to baseball, he would have to face discipline for his positive test.

The positive test in spring training was the third time Ramirez tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug.

This truly sucks. Manny's entire career now is officially tainted. I think people have already moved on from his 50-game suspension from his time in LA. "Everyone did them", blah blah blah. But to know that he kept doing them, that's not something you can ignore. Once an absolute lock for enshrinement, this won't bode well for his Hall of Fame chances.

There's surely going to be a lot more to come from this story, so let's all get prepared to have the steroids debate. Again.

Manny deserved a better goodbye than this. But this is probably a more fitting exit than a feel-good goodbye tour. And really, like all the other missteps in his career, he brought it upon himself.